Higbee v. Housing Authority of Jacksonville

197 So. 479, 143 Fla. 560
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 28, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 197 So. 479 (Higbee v. Housing Authority of Jacksonville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higbee v. Housing Authority of Jacksonville, 197 So. 479, 143 Fla. 560 (Fla. 1940).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 562 On August 29, 1939, J.H. Higbee, R.L. Slauter, Montague Land Company, Josephine U. Bettlini and N.G. Jennerette filed their bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Duval County, Florida, against the Housing Authority of Jacksonville, the Commissioners of the Housing Authority of Jacksonville, the City of Jacksonville, the United States Housing Authority, and Nathan Straus, as administrator of the United States Housing Authority, *Page 563 and alleged that plaintiffs were citizens, residents and taxpayers of the City of Jacksonville; owned real property in fee simple situated within a certain described area within the City of Jacksonville, and owned other improved lands located within the City of Jacksonville, and the property is rented to tenants of low incomes.

The bill of complaint consists of some twenty-five paragraphs raising the constitutionality of Chapter 17981 and Chapter 17983, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1937. The prayer of the bill seeks an order or decree holding the aforesaid Acts void and unconstitutional, and, further, that a restraining order or injunction for a number of reasons or grounds be issued against the United States Housing Authority and the Housing Authority of the City of Jacksonville, restraining each of them from proceeding further for the reasons set forth in the bill of complaint. Attached to the bill of complaint, and by appropriate allegations made a part thereof, is a copy of loan contract between the Housing Authority of Jacksonville and the United States housing Authority and identified as Exhibit "A." Also a copy of the Co-Operative Agreement between the City of Jacksonville and the Housing Authority of Jacksonville is attached and identified as Exhibit "B." Likewise a copy of annual contributions contracts between the Housing Authority of Jacksonville, Florida, and the United States Housing Authority is attached and identified as Exhibit "C;" and a map or plat of the area involved and located within the City of Jacksonville is identified as Exhibit "D."

On October 2, 1939, the Housing Authority of Jacksonville and the named Commissioners thereof filed an answer to the bill of complaint, and paragraph 27 thereof contains pertinent allegations, viz.:

"Further answering said bill of complaint and each and every allegation thereof, these defendants aver that the *Page 564 property described in paragraph numbered One (1) thereof is commonly known in Jacksonville as 'Hansontown' and is the site of the proposed slum clearance project of the defendant Housing, Authority of Jacksonville (Florida), a corporation, which project is the subject matter of this suit, and these defendants aver that said property lies within colored school attendance district X, as the same is shown in the report of the Council of Social Agencies of Jacksonville, Florida; that said described area in said Bill of Complaint is inhabited 100% by negro population; that said school district lies within an area which has a greater concentration of population per city block than any other portion of Jacksonville, and that the property proposed to be acquired for this slum clearance project has the greatest concentration of population per city block in said area; that said inhabitants of said school district X and said described property fall within the group having the highest death rate within the City of Jacksonville, and particularly has it the greatest number of deaths in infant stage, from pellagra, tuberculosis and venereal diseases; that numerically speaking the greatest number of commitments for insanity are issued for inhabitants of said district; that said district falls within the group having the greatest percentage of dependency upon direct relief; that greater numbers of juvenile delinquents are apprehended out of said district than any other; that said district's inhabitants furnish the municipal court with more adult criminal cases per capita for disposition by four times than any other district in Jacksonville; that from the standpoint of education, playgrounds and recreation said district is in the lowest population percentage bracket in Jacksonville.

"These defendants further allege that in 1934 at the suggestion of the Honorable Scott M. Loftin, then President of the American Bar Association, the Jacksonville City *Page 565 Commission appointed a Crime Justice Commission of fifty-five members, including judges, lawyers, ministers and business and professional men and women of the City of Jacksonville, for the purpose of investigating conditions in Jacksonville in relation to crime. Two years later they sent in their report stating, with reference to the district in which said project is located, among other things:

" 'The housing in this area is uniformly bad in spots. In one portion of this area, called Hansontown, the net cost of municipal services exceeds the net income from taxation by $40,000.00 per year. This is a net loss to the taxpayers as a whole.'

"These defendants allege that said finding by said Crime-Justice Commission is true in fact as of the present time, and that said section called Hansontown will be wiped out by their slum clearance project.

"Said Crime-Justice Commission recommended, among other things:

" 'That the City Planning Board be requested to create permanent sub-committees in those districts where needed to devise ways and means for slum clearance with particular reference to better housing and the ultimate elimination of those places which are commonly recognized as crime breeding.'

"These defendants aver that subsequent to the filing of said report the State Legislature of the State of Florida passed Chapter 17971, Laws of Florida 1937, under which the defendant, Housing Authority, of Jacksonville (Florida), a corporation, was created, and that said Defendant now proposes to eliminate these slums from this area of the City of Jacksonville, Florida, and to replace them with a low-rent housing project thereby effecting a saving to the *Page 566 taxpayers of said City and reducing the disease and crime in said City."

The Housing Authority of Jacksonville and the named commissions thereof filed a joint and several motion to dismis the bill of complaint on some 26 grounds, and one of them was to the effect that the bill of complaint failed to state grounds for equitable relief. On October 2, 1939, the City of Jacksonville filed a motion to dismiss the bill of complaint on nine grounds and one thereof was that the bill of complaint stated no ground for equitable relief against the City of Jacksonville.

On November 8, 1939, the Honorable A.D. McNeill, Circuit Judge, made and entered an order granting or sustaining the two motions to dismiss, and his ruling as stated in his order was bottomed on the case of Marvin as Admr. v. Housing Authority of Jacksonville, 133 Fla. 590, 183 So. 145, and an unreported case of Lott v. City of Orlando, 142 Fla. 338, 196 So. 313.

On November 16, 1939, the plaintiffs below having announced that they would stand by their bill of complaint and refused or declined to amend the same, an order was made and entered dismissing the same, and from said order of dismissal an appeal has been perfected to this Court.

It is first contended that the case of Marvin v. Housing Authority of Jacksonville, 133 Fla. 590, 183 So. 145

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197 So. 479, 143 Fla. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higbee-v-housing-authority-of-jacksonville-fla-1940.